Beverages

San Francisco Goes After Sugary Drinks, Again

Proposals would require warnings on billboards, bans of soda ads on public property

SAN FRANCISCO -- San Francisco lawmakers are taking another stab at curbing soda consumption seven months after local voters rejected taxing sugary drinks in the name of public health, according to a StarTribune report.

San Francisco sugary-drink ban text

A Board of Supervisors committee is expected to take up three pieces of legislation on Monday that represent a new front in the sweetened-beverage wars, the newspaper reported, citing the San Francisco Chronicle.

One proposed measure would require soda ads posted on buses, billboards and other city surfaces to carry warnings stating that drinks with added sugar contribute to obesity, diabetes and tooth decay. The rule would also apply to sports venues.

The label would read, “WARNING: Drinking beverages with added sugar(s) contributes to obesity, diabetes and tooth decay. This is a message from the City and County of San Francisco.”

The other laws under consideration would ban soda ads on public property and prohibit city funds from being used to buy soda.

Industry groups that spent $10 million to defeat the proposed soda tax on the San Francisco ballot last November plan to fight the bills, American Beverage Association spokesman Roger Salazar told the Chronicle.

"We believe that all sugars are the same," Salazar said. "No one product can be singled out more than anything else."

A bill that would have required health warning labels on individual bottles and cans of sugar-sweetened drinks sold in California, the Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Safety Warning Act, was introduced in the state Senate this year. It died in committee on a tie vote with one abstention.

Click here to read the complete San Francisco Chronicle report.

 

 

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